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12 AIDS Awareness
- HIV prevention - Youth and Schools
Why HIV Prevention
is often swamped by care Economics
of HIV prevention AIDS
awareness and HIV prevention saves huge care costs Health
education for AIDS / HIV is free The
cost of AIDS Swapping
third world debt for AIDS prevention programmes When
AIDS deaths damage the economy Ten
years before HIV / AIDS health savings Advertising
has encouraged HIV transmission Sexual
behaviour can change Young
people take greatest HIV risks Sex
education needs to start at a younger age The
AIDS generation is growing up AIDS
in the church youth group - Christian sex education Teenagers
in church get pregnant Starting
sex education earlier in churches Sex
and HIV in the playground `Sex
is dirty so save it for someone you love' Role
models do matter in peer group HIV prevention programmes
Schools programmes for HIV and AIDS
awareness
Lesson
1: HIV/AIDS education in schools is sensitive Lesson
2: Facts alone on HIV are of limited value Lesson
3: Family deaths change sexual behaviour Lesson
4: We need to make AIDS real to pupils Lesson
5: Professional sexual health educators working within a moral framework
Lesson 6: Success breeds
success Lesson
7: Compulsory HIV/AIDS education opens new doors Lesson
8: Help pupils find their own HIV answers Lesson
9: No need to preach about AIDS Lesson
10: HIV awareness classes can be large or small Lesson
11: Teachers need to be closely involved in HIV lessons
Lesson
12: Sexual orientation is a separate issue Lesson
13: Drug use or misuse must be discussed with integrity
Lesson
14: Condoms need to be discussed in context Lesson
15: Ethnic minorities often welcome a Christian approach
Lesson
16: Catholic schools often welcome sensitive AIDS education
Lesson
17: AIDS and sexual health lesson content needs to vary with age
Lesson
18: AIDS education needed before some leave school Lesson
19: Establishing traditional behaviour patterns as most common can
be very effective Lesson
20: Social skills/peer resistance training works for HIV Dealing
with criticism Coping
with the AIDS `thought police' Objection
1: `Large HIV awareness classes are a waste of time' Objection
2: `Faithfulness to one partner is a naive suggestion'
Objection
3: `Suggesting celibacy or monogamy as options is moralistic'
Objection
4: `If you don't show people how to use condoms they won't bother
or they will make mistakes' Objection
5: `Visiting sexual health speakers are dangerous because they do
not fit into the overall work of the school' Objection
6: `Not enough time is given to gay issues' Objection
7: `You fail to point out that you are almost 100% safe unless you
inject drugs or have anal sex with a gay man' Objection
9: `You are creating a negative view of sex' Objection
10: `You should teach people other ways to have sex' Over-promotion
can be a problem Setting
up a schools programme for sexual health, HIV prevention and drug
abuse

Note: This chapter of The Truth about AIDS by Dr
Patrick Dixon is the original text as published by Kingsway
in 1994 updated 2002 and may be reproduced with acknowledgment.
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hiv medicine, aids ribbon, needle exchange programs, hiv facts.

CHAPTERS: Introduction
1
The Extent of the AIDS Nightmare 2
What's so Special about a Virus? 3
When Cells Start to Die 4
How People Become Infected 5
Questions People Ask 6
Condoms Are Unsafe 7
Moral Dilemas 8 Wrath or
Reaping? 9
Some Life and Death Issues 10
When Church Members Need Help 11
Others Need Help Too 12
Saving Lives 13 Needle
and Condom Distribution? 14
Special Issues in Poorer Nations 15
A Ten Point Plan for the Government 16
A Global Christian Challenge Appendix
B Appendix C
Appendix D
- Latest
AIDS statistics, AIDS information - Africa AIDS Crisis - History
of AIDS - AIDS epidemic, India, Asia, Eastern Europe, Central
Europe, Russia, America, China
- AIDS
research - causes of AIDS - AIDS treatment - retroviruses - protease
inhibitors - cure? Antiretroviral therapy for HIV
- HIV
transmission, AIDS risk factors and HIV window period
- What
is AIDS? - HIV symptoms - AIDS symtoms - symptoms early HIV infection
- early signs infection
- How
reliable are condoms? HIV dating - reducing HIV transmission
- Life
and death issues - HIV medicine
- AIDS
FAQ - vaccine, treatment, AIDS testing, Africa, China, Children,
workplace discrimination, AIDS myths, origin of AIDS
- Moral
dilemmas - euthanasia and AIDS treatments
- AIDS
and the church - when church members need help
- Community
care - treatment, adults, children, orphans
- AIDS
education - AIDS awareness in youth and schools
- HIV
Prevention - needle exchange program and condom distribution
- AIDS
in Africa and HIV in Africa, HIV infected surgeons
- Ten
point AIDS management plan for governments
- A global Christian challenge - church response to AIDS
- Guidelines
for best practice in running HIV / AIDS programmes in developing
countries, plus many helpful case studies and stories (Africa
/ India / Asia)
- A Christian
response to AIDS - global AIDS challenge to the church (article
for Tear Fund)
Why
prevention is often swamped by care
(return to index)
What do you do if you are walking along the road one day and two
cars spin off the road in quick succession as they reach a dangerous
bend? Do you run to help the victims? Do you run up the road to
yell a warning to traffic? Do you go into a house and phone for
an ambulance and the police?
Most of us respond to the immediate, which is why in many countries
care for those with AIDS is eating up most of the AIDS budget. Prevention
is usually an afterthought in spending terms, which is madness considering
that infection is lethal and incurable, yet almost totally preventable.
Infection is also very expensive.
Economics
of prevention
(return to index)
Effective prevention campaigns could halve new HIV infections,
according to the World Health Organisation. A global programme in
all developing countries would cost less than the cost of a can
of Coke for each person in the world. The saving in direct and indirect
costs could be as great as $100 billion.
Prevention
saves huge care costs
(return to index)
The economics in favour of prevention are staggering, yet little
action is taken. Each life saved through education saves not only
the costs of care but also the losses to the economy from that person's
untimely death. How much does it cost to save a life? The
figure is harder to come by, but let us argue from common-sense
principles. Let us suppose that a schools worker with experience
of working in home care spends a whole year taking classes in schools
and talking to young people. The person sees up to 8,000 pupils
in the year, as well as talking to a large number of staff, parents
and others. Let us suppose that only one individual changes behaviour
so that infection is avoided. The educator would still probably
have saved the government more than the educator's annual salary
in care and treatment costs and losses to the economy.
Health
education is free
(return to index)
How many lives do you think a good educator could save? Ten? Twenty?
Thirty? Fifty? High impact AIDS prevention is quite
simply one of the most cost-effective things a government can possibly
spend money on. The reason for this extraordinary fact in industrialised
nations is that AIDS is such a difficult and expensive illness to
treat. The drugs used are some of the most complex and costly ever
produced. Until recently anti-viral medicines were so expensive
that a doctor in Uganda would have had to save every penny he earned
for ten years to pay for one year's treatment of just one person.
But in poorer nations the costs are also very significant, especially
when AIDS strikes a significant number of the senior executives,
civil servants and community leaders in the country. Then
there are the indirect costs caused by loss of business confidence,
and companies pulling out to invest in other nations.

The cost of AIDS
(return to index)
The cost of treating one person with AIDS in the UK is the same
as the Ugandan government spends on the entire health budget for
almost 25,000 people for a year. But as I say, education is cost
effective in Uganda too. I am excluding here, of course, any other
measure of cost apart from economic. How can you place a cost on
human life?
Incidentally, I have sometimes been asked by people in developing
countries to help provide supplies of `wonder' drugs. The trouble
is that as we have seen these drugs just delay death and they are
toxic, so complex laboratory monitoring is needed. Other cheaper
medicines will have a far greater impact for the same price.
For example, many people with AIDS will be helped by receiving
antibiotics to treat chest infections, anti-fungals to treat thrush
in the mouth, anti-diarrhoeal drugs and painkillers. None of these
may be available to those in rural areas on a regular basis. A year's
supply of anti-viral medication could be exchanged for medicines
to prolong life and control symptoms in up to 200 people with AIDS.
When
deaths damage the economy
(return to index)
Indirect costs of AIDS are the biggest problem in many developing
countries. When a young person dies who is well educated, highly
skilled and a key person in some part of your country's economy,
a part of that economy dies. For example, if a factory in Malawi
loses four out of six of its directors from AIDS in a year, you
can be sure that production will fall, and so will the export orders,
further damaging the economy.
If key designers, sales and marketing executives, engineers or
people with mechanical skills die, then there is a cost to the government.
The economy shrinks. Although this is hard to measure, and you may
not think it matters when unemployment is high, in the longer term
the loss is significant.
But this talk of finances is to reduce humans to items for sale
or purchase. People are worth more than a few thousand pounds. Whether
they are famous or unknown, people are people and have value for
who they are as individuals. Yet as we have seen, many governments
spend practically nothing on prevention in comparison to care.
Ten
years before health savings
(return to index)
Unfortunately, as with anti-smoking campaigns, prevention costs
money up front, while government spending will have to continue
for at least another decade because HIV, like tobacco, has a very
slow effect. With HIV prevention, health services will probably
see no real reduction in illness from prevention campaigns today
until well into the next decade.
Does health prevention work anyway? How do we know if any of the
millions spent so far have had any effect at all? All health promotion
tries to show people cause and effect, persuading them that the
effects are so terrible that it is worth paying a big personal price
to stop doing something they like doing very much.
Behaviour
can change
(return to index)
Studies have shown that behaviour does change, and can do so quite
quickly. However the most significant shifts in behaviour take some
years to achieve. Infection rates among teenage girls in Uganda
have fallen dramatically over a decade, from 23% to 5% by 2002,
with smaller but significant falls also in Zambia. Similar successes
have been seen in Thai men. Infection rates per year have fallen
from 143,000 to 29,000 people a year in Thailand over the last decade.
We have also seen huge changes in the sexual behaviour of gay men
and drug injectors in America and Europe.
However most success stories have happened after the community
concerned began to see significant numbers of AIDS deaths.
It is far harder to persuade people to change behaviour at an earlier
stage of the epidemic. We have seen huge changes among drug injectors
in several countries, many of whom have ceased sharing equipment
or injecting as a result of education. We have also seen condom
sales increase in many areas following AIDS campaigns targeted at
the general population. All these changes have been seen in a very
short space of time compared to the slow response to anti-smoking
campaigns. This gives us some hope for the future.
But relapse is common, and risk-taking is on the rise again in
Europe and parts of Africa. Every year is a fresh challenge
with a rising generation of new youngsters taking risks for the
very first time, and an ageing population of others who decide to
take a chance that would have worried them a lot five years ago.
Young
people take greatest risks
(return to index)
Half of all new HIV infections globally are in those who are younger
than twenty-five years old, so prevention must start young. However,
surveys show that those changing behaviour the most as a result
of campaigns are those who would be likely anyway to be settling
down, changing partners less frequently. For example, in the UK
and some other countries, gay men aged thirty-five to forty-five
have reduced their number of partners, while younger men unfortunately
seem to be taking bigger risks again. We see this in the rising
number of young gay men going to sex disease clinics with new cases
of gonorrhoea---a sure sign that they are having unprotected sex.
Those in the firing line are young people. Every year in many countries
the age of puberty falls a little more for reasons which are unclear,
although it is related to increasing body weight in girls. At the
same time, the age of settling down is being effectively pushed
in the other direction, with longer training and apprenticeships
and changing social pressures.
Male sex drive is strongest in those who are youngest and it hits
boys at a time when they are least able to handle it all emotionally.
A twelve-year-old boy and girl may be experiencing strong urges
to explore sex at a time when they are incapable of working out
a stable adult relationship. These pressures continue to fuel the
debate for and against lowering the age of consent (see
Chapter Seven).
Sex
education needs to start at a younger age
(return to index)
In many countries the average age of the first sexual encounter
has been falling for many years. In Uganda a survey of teenage
mothers found that 70% had their first sexual encounter before their
fourteenth birthday. We know that in many towns and cities in the
UK over half of all sixteen-year-olds are sexually active, possibly
with an even higher figure in some other nations. Research in the
US has shown that the number of partners people have in their lives
can be directly related to the age they first have sex.
Young girls are particularly vulnerable to HIV and other sex diseases
because of the immaturity of the female genital tract, particularly
in those thirteen years old and younger. This may be part of the
reason why one Ugandan study found that there were five times as
many fifteen to nineteen-year-old women with AIDS than men of the
same age. It's the same in older women. In Kisumu,
Kenya, for example, in 1998, the prevalence of HIV infection among
women aged 15-29 was 23%, while, in young men, it was 3.5%.
The other reason may be that young girls in many countries are
targeted by older men as less likely to be infected. It is also
true that for physiological reasons a woman is twice as likely to
get HIV from an infected man than a man is from an infected woman.
As we have seen, it is far easier to prevent risky habits than
to change them once established. Parental attitude and religious
faith have also been found to be important influences on teenage
sexual activity.
Incidentally, we also know there is a big link with smoking. One
study in the UK has shown that those who smoke under the age of
sixteen are six times as likely to be sexually active as those who
do not, possibly because both activities are to do with wanting
to take risks, to experiment and to rebel.
For all these reasons it is obvious that we need to start young
and that a big part of the national campaigns needs to be directed
towards schools, or where youth tend to meet. In some countries,
less than half of all teenagers attend full-time education. Those
becoming teenagers today are entering a different world. Unless
we find a vaccine or cure for HIV, they are going to see some difficult
things. With 1 in 200 of the whole global adult population already
infected, they are likely to find this has risen to 1 in 100 by
the time they have children of their own.
The
AIDS generation is growing up
(return to index)
So then, AIDS is a preventable illness, and very expensive to treat.
With the epidemic out of control in most of the world, our young
people need to be prepared urgently to live in an AIDS world without
dying, but what do we say and how do we put it across? Clearly the
way we present a message will need to change with the audience and
the context to be most effective. An approach for committed Christian
teenagers may need to be different from that used in a secular school.
At the most basic level there is no point in preaching a sermon
about immorality based on Bible verses, when your audience does
not even believe in God. They are unlikely to be impressed by your
arguments. A more pragmatic approach is needed. Yet for those wanting
to base their lives on the teachings of Jesus, a talk explaining
what the Bible teaches about sex will be very helpful.
AIDS
in the church youth group
(return to index)
Because of the time delays between infection and illness, it is
far more likely that you will find the church youth leader coming
to you than one of the teenagers. Teenagers developing illness are
more likely to have been infected at a much younger age--- from
infection at birth or from medical treatments for example.
Teenagers
in church get pregnant
(return to index)
Surveys show that not only is teenage pregnancy a real possibility
in most churches, but also sexually-transmitted diseases, including
AIDS. Most churches find these things hard to face. It can be a
terrible shock to find that the daughter of the church leader is
three months pregnant, or that `nice young lads' have been buying
and selling drugs on church premises.
Unless we think that somehow our church is entirely separate from
and irrelevant to the community in which we live, we mustn't be
surprised to find that the things which go on in almost every street
in the land also go on from time to time in the lives of those connected
in some way with our churches.
Starting
sex education earlier in churches
(return to index)
We need to take sex education and AIDS prevention seriously with
young people in our churches, before they become sexually active.
The survey above shows us this means starting before teenagers reach
sixteen years old, probably at around the time of puberty, or even
earlier.
Some may feel that insensitive approaches to these subjects at
such a young age are only bound to encourage experimentation. I
agree, and all sex education should be carried out sensitively in
a balanced way, emphasising the positive aspects of marriage and
family life, waiting for the right person.
Unfortunately, in a video and satellite age the fact is that whether
you are aware of it or not, many thirteen- or fourteen-year-olds
are regularly watching 18-rated pornography, either in their own
homes with borrowed videos, or in their friends' homes while parents
are out or busy.
As most parents know, many nine- or ten-year-olds are now regularly
watching 15-rated films in the same way---and older people also
need to realise that because ratings have become more relaxed, it
means ten-year-olds are now seeing things which would have been
X-rated some years ago.
Educating parents is vitally important, encouraging parents to
take the primary responsibility in these areas which are rightfully
theirs.
Sex in
the playground
(return to index)
Children are bombarded with images and stories of sex. The playground
talk of sex has increased so that parents are now finding their
five- to eight-year-olds asking for explanations about sex because
of the things they are being told by other boys and girls at school.
In such a sex-obsessed world, the almost complete silence of the
church is nothing short of bizarre---especially as the Bible itself
is full of stories about sex and sexual imagery, or about sexual
standards.
We need to face what is going on and break the sex taboo, bringing
our discussions about it into the frame of normal Christian conversation
and experience. We can no longer live in this two-worlds unreality.
We are letting our young people down.
`Sex
is dirty so save it for someone you love'
(return to index)
We need to be careful about the mixed messages we give in church---for
example, `Sex is dirty so save it for someone you love.' This can
be the mixed impression left in the mind of an impressionable child
brought up in the church. Another conflicting impression can be:
`Sex is wonderful---but don't tell the children about it.'
We need to communicate that sex is a wonderful gift from God, an
amazing experience, as we saw in Chapter
8. We need to teach that God loves sex---it's the waste of sex
outside marriage that causes him grief. Sex was invented by God
as a gift to humankind.
We need to include teaching about sex as part of the overall programme
of the church. Possibly a quarter of your congregation may be going
home from church to enjoy it with their spouses, their children
are obsessed with it, the television and videos from the corner
shop are full of it and the Bible is very explicit about it, so
why are we still avoiding it?
Role
models do matter
(return to index)
We need to make sure youth workers in the church are capable of
handling the subject, and more importantly able to set a good example
in their own lives. Young people need to see role models worth following;
models that are exciting and that work. They need to see marriages
in the leaders of the church that are an attractive alternative
to the often temporary relationships they see around them. We live
in a generation which has almost lost the memory and experience
of happy lifelong commitment, yet is searching for it.
The answer is to include sex, sexuality and AIDS as topics in what
the church is already doing.
Schools programmes
(return to index)
Teaching in church youth groups will only reach a few. What about
schools? There can be few lessons which are more controversial.
As soon as we think about education on sex or AIDS in schools, we
find ourselves caught up in polarised debate. We find strong opinions
expressed about general approach, content, methods, context, teacher
support, parental opinion and the age it should happen. Millions
of words have been written and tens of thousands of hours have been
spent in training or in discussions, yet very little is actually
happening in many countries.
Meanwhile, ACET England has developed an education programme with
a simple, practical, low-risk approach which has become immensely
popular with teachers, with a take-up rate of our materials in up
to 60% of secondary schools. While it can hardly be regarded as
a blueprint for success, there are general lessons to be learned,
a number of which can be adapted to the situation in different countries.
Similar programmes are run by members of the ACET International
Alliance in countries such as Scotland, Ireland, Russia, Czech Republic,
Slovakia and Uganda.
Instead of getting caught up in discussions of educational theory,
it is possible to start from the other end of things; from the point
of view of a teacher facing a sceptical class for an AIDS lesson.
Teachers face real difficulties. Educational committees and self-appointed
experts can generate a wide variety of materials that may be `politically
correct' and fit with the latest fashions in education, but which
turn out to be completely unusable.
Here is a summary of twenty findings based on the situation in
the UK. A similar process in other nations will produce some differences,
but fewer than you might think.
REMEMBER - AIDS education is literally a matter of life and death.
You are in a race against time. Your aim is not only to inform
but somehow to persuade people to change, to change hearts and minds.
Information is useless without action, without commitment.
Life's too short to pack pupil's brains with more data about HIV
unless their lives are changed as a result. And of course,
persuasion is an art: helping people make up their own minds,
to take their own decisions, to take hold of their own futures.
Lesson
1: HIV/AIDS education in schools is sensitive
(return to index)
Schools work is a sensitive issue because people cannot agree on
what should be taught. Staff, parents, governors and national regulations
need to be respected.Be careful to use appropriate language. AIDS
prevention is difficult because on the one hand we want to hold
attention, to be relevant and to have impact, while on the other
we must not upset or offend. AIDS prevention is most effective as
an integral part of sex education or education about the risks of
addiction. However, in educating about sex or drug abuse, we always
have to be careful that we are not just feeding the imagination
and encouraging experimentation.
Lesson
2: Facts alone are of limited value
(return to index)
If you go into a classroom and try to give an AIDS talk, you will
see that facts alone can be a waste of time. Teenagers are bored
rigid with AIDS in low-incidence countries like the UK, and may
think they know everything in high incidence countries The whole
subject has been done to death by the media.People need to see AIDS
is real before they are going to listen to you talk about it or
seriously consider changing their behaviour.
Lesson
3: Family deaths change behaviour
(return to index)
As we have seen, behaviour often changes dramatically when someone
experiences the death of a family member or close friend. The trouble
is, by the time many young people in schools today begin to see
deaths among their friends, we will have a much higher infection
rate.We do not have to wait at all in countries like Uganda,
where in a schools lesson I asked for a show of hands from all those
who had been to the AIDS funeral of a family member. Most of the
hands shot up. They needed no persuading that AIDS was for real
and they were keen to listen.
Lesson
4: We need to make AIDS real to pupils
(return to index)
One way to help make the illness real to pupils in low incidence
areas is to ask people with AIDS to visit schools. Unfortunately,
this can be very difficult to organise and is unlikely to be possible
in low-incidence countries, except on a small scale, for several
reasons---the commonest given being the risk of anti-heroes. Many
schools do not wish to bring in someone with AIDS who might become
something of a role model regarding previous lifestyle. Teachers
in the UK recently had a shock over prevention of drug abuse. The
government produced striking posters with the slogan `heroin screws
you up'. The picture showed a young man with boils on his face,
looking quite ill and sorry for himself. A number of schools
requested these, but found the posters kept disappearing without
trace. It seemed that teenage girls were pinning them up on their
bedroom walls. The boy had become an anti-hero, the latest pin-up
idol. There have also been sensitivities over someone coming into
school who might want to promote gay lifestyles. That leaves only
those infected through heterosexual sex or blood products, many
of whom are not enthusiastic about being in the public eye in this
way.
It takes an act of great courage to walk into a school where you
are unsure of people's reactions. Another effective way is to use
educators who have been involved in the care of those dying at home
with AIDS locally. This has been ACET's approach.
A comprehensive review of prevention programmes by the World Health
Organisation has shown that person-to-person prevention is especially
effective, particularly when `peer led'. In other words, where the
target audience can identify with the educator--for example, similar
age, background or experience. In other areas of prevention
this has been very successful - using infected commercial sex workers
to reach sex workers, or truck drivers to reach truck drivers.
Lesson
5: Professional educators working within a moral framework
(return to index)
AIDS education is often relatively easy for a church organisation
to provide compared to a secular agency, because many schools want
sex education within a traditional but compassionate, caring moral
framework.
ACET International projects provide educators tin various countries
to take individual lessons, teams to teach larger groups, and materials
and training for school staff. Teaching methods vary from interactive
questionnaire, class discussion, role play, dramatic presentations,
conferences for large groups and formal teaching assisted by overheads,
charts, colour slides or video. Every country and situation is unique.
Care credentials are helpful: educators who have helped care
for people dying with AIDS are able to talk from experience and
have instant credibility. There is no longer a `boredom factor'
when you are talking about real people dying of a real disease.
Formal educational qualifications are unnecessary so long as individuals
are carefully selected for their communication skills with young
people, and are properly trained. The personal values and lifestyle
example of the educator is a very important part of the message.
Extra security is provided by the presence of the class teacher.
Paper qualifications do not mean someone will be able to persuasively
alter the behaviour of teenagers in school. AIDS is placed
in the whole context of sex education, in the framework of relationships
and commitment, empowering people to make their own choices and
helping them find their own ways to say no to sex or drug abuse
if that is their choice.
Lesson
6: Success breeds success
(return to index)
The best advert is personal recommendation based on past experience.
A good reputation is essential, and takes time to build. Everything
needs to be of the highest standard. Endorsements are helpful from
health authorities and other influential bodies including religious
organisations where culturally appropriate.
You can transfer reputation and success from one country to another
or from city to city, riding on the back of success and solid reputation
elsewhere. This is why networking and being part of international
Alliances or recognised Federations is important. Anything
in fact which has a recognised badge of quality. But conversely
take care because reputations can be damaged by actions of others
some distance away.
Lesson
7: Compulsory HIV/AIDS education opens new doors
(return to index)
A further impetus has been given to schools work on AIDS in many
countries by changes in the national curriculum, as has been happening
in Eastern and Western Europe recently.
Lesson
8: Help pupils find their own answers
(return to index)
People often ask whether we preach or why we don't, depending on
their position. The answer to both camps is the same: sermons only
on Sundays. Pupils need to work out their own answers. There is
no point at all in trying to back up what you are saying from the
Bible when talking to people who have never read it, don't believe
in it and don't even believe God exists.
You will merely undermine your message by convincing people that
you are giving a biased view of this confusing epidemic. You will
be open to the accusation that you are manipulating the facts to
get people to accept Christian lifestyles. We are only in the classroom
for an hour or two on a couple of occasions, yet the message needs
to last a lifetime. Experience has shown that a long-term impact
is more likely if pupils take part in the presentation, and come
to their own conclusions about changing behaviour or avoiding risk.
A key is a relationship of trust and respect built between the
educator and pupils. They need to feel able to talk freely, and
to feel that what is being discussed matters and is being covered
in a balanced way.
Lesson
9: No need to preach
(return to index)
While it is true that you cannot preach, our experience is that
you do not need to. The facts speak very loudly for themselves.
It is also true that the kind of person the educator is, and the
way the person comes across, can communicate a lot.
When people see someone who is young, single, who enjoys life,
has a sense of humour and a normal sex drive, yet is not sleeping
around, a new role model is created. These things can emerge in
response to pupils' own questions, which can be quite probing. The
lesson is designed to help them also talk very frankly and openly.
Young people are very perceptive and can detect double standards,
double talk, lack of integrity and hypocrisy. Teaching one thing
and doing another totally destroys any impact you might have, and
makes it certain that behaviour will remain unchanged at best or
become even riskier at worst. That's a very important reason
why Christian educators have proven so popular in many countries
with parents and teachers, especially when they know these educators
are also linked to care programmes and bring compassion as well
as an example that can be safely followed.
The idea of using role models of college age in schools is not
new. However, many studies have shown that if pupils are presented
with an older person who has an overbearing authoritarian manner
telling them to `be good', they are likely to react. Some may even
be more likely to take risks in the future as an expression of rebellion
against authority.
Teenagers are often far more concerned about their own health than
adults realise. A US study found a high level of concern about AIDS,
schoolwork, making friends, sex, discrimination and dental problems.
Teenage girls were also worried about violence, rape, menstruation,
abuse, pregnancy, sadness and being overweight. Boys were concerned
additionally about homosexuality, sex, car accidents and low weight.
Lesson
10: Classes can be large or small
(return to index)
Many theorists say that only small classes are useful. In practice
you are often limited by the timetables and priorities of the school.
If teachers already have booklets or other usable materials and
are teaching the subject themselves, then they may be very grateful
for an outside presentation to a large group to help reinforce the
message.
Drama can be an effective way to communicate to larger groups,
although it is very labour intensive and expensive in terms
of pupils reached per hour. Drama has been particularly helpful
in reaching populations in developing countries, including variations
such as the use of puppets in performances.
The aim is to make the illness real so teachers can teach about
the disease with greater attention from their pupils. The greatest
impact then comes in smaller groups where there is time for discussion
and feedback, and where the educator has an ongoing presence in
the school. The key is continuity. Behaviour change
is most likely to occur when a group of people are involved in a
"journey" together, as a result of which their group culture
changes. And that all takes time. But surely it's worth
time to save a life?
Believe me: when you've had the deeply distressing experience
of caring for lots of people with AIDS who got infected as teenagers
of young adults, and a teacher invites you in but says you've only
got ten minutes with a large group, you grab the opportunity.
Any chance to raise the issues of AIDS is a chance not to
be wasted and who knows, you may convince the teachers that they
need to do more, lots more. Of course one also needs to look
at cost - benefit and how practical it is to do short visits, if
there's a distance to be travelled.
I often say "This is the most important school lesson you
will ever have in your entire education, because this is the one
that will save your life or the lives of your friends."
Or: "Unless your own peer group behaves very differently from
those who left this school in the last decade, you too could find
yourselves going to the funerals of many of your closest friends."
Or: "I'm here today because I don't want to be looking
after you with AIDS in ten year's time."
Lesson
11: Teachers need to be closely involved
(return to index)
Most teachers want to be involved, although work pressures are
so great that it can often be very tempting to leave the classroom
to get on with preparation elsewhere. ACET International Allianceeducators
in England and some other countries ask the class teacher to be
present during sessions. Although some are surprised because they
expect pupils will be more inhibited, we have found the advantages
more than outweigh the disadvantages.
The aim is to equip and give confidence to class teachers, not
to deskill them so they feel the need to leave it all to outside
specialists. Watching us at work gives confidence to others. Teachers
often feel able to take over much of the work in future years, thus
increasing the impact of our work.
If an outsider comes in to talk on a subject like AIDS, the danger
is that the message will be entirely disconnected from everything
else in school. Even worse is the possibility that there may be
conflicting messages.
When teachers sit in, it guarantees that what is said fits in with
what they want. It also guards against complaints from parents.
There is a witness to exactly what actually happens in each class
- you never know when a pupil might make some kind of accusation
about - say - insensitive language, or when a parent might make
an (unjustified) complaint. Finally, it ensures that what
the school is teaching about HIV is as accurate as possible.
Because every class is not only a pupil presentation, but also
a teacher training session, a small number of educators can have
a big impact over a year. Between classes there is also the opportunity
to talk with staff informally, or to meet the head teacher and advise
on syllabus priorities.
Evaluation is essential. Another big advantage of having teachers
remain in class during presentations is good feedback. It is essential
to evaluate any programme, particularly in schools. I have always
encouraged teachers to complete evaluation sheets at the end of
presentations. They may prefer to wait until after the following
week's lesson when they have had feedback from the pupils themselves.
From time to time whole classes are asked to complete evaluation
forms rating the presentation and booklets.
Lesson
12: Sexual orientation is a separate issue
(return to index)
As we have seen, many schools in developed countries are very anxious
about how gay relationships will be presented in an AIDS talk, because
a high proportion of people with HIV in these nations were infected
through gay lifestyles. There is always a risk that an AIDS lesson
by a visiting educator could open up all kinds of sensitive areas
in the classroom, including lengthy discussions about sexual orientation,
detailed descriptions of anal sex, oral sex, ways to masturbate,
demonstrations of putting on condoms and the promotion of gay lifestyles
in schools. The teacher may have to spend the next few weeks sorting
out the chaos!
Whatever our own views are on these areas, we need to listen carefully
to what parents, teachers, governors or community leaders are saying
would be most helpful. Schools usually prefer an objective low-key
approach using non-emotive language in a matter-of-fact way. They
do not want an AIDS lesson to be hijacked by other issues.
It is always best to use plain language where you can, so, for
example, I prefer to talk of sex between people of the opposite
sex, or sex between men and women, or sex between people of the
same sex, instead of `heterosexual', `homosexual' or `gay'. The
latter two terms are very unhelpful and misleading, because many
young people are unclear whether you mean someone who has a particular
attraction to someone of the same sex or someone who is sexually
active.
In the classroom, then, I rarely use the words `gay' or `homosexual'.
There is another reason. As we have seen, six out of ten men who
have homosexual relationships also have sex with women. Some may
not think of themselves as gay or bisexual.
When avoiding this kind of language, it is unusual to find problems
in the classroom or with parents. We are not there to talk about
why or how sexual orientation develops, nor is it the job of schools
in most countries to comment on the appropriateness or otherwise
of gay or straight sexual activity, except as a health issue.
Lesson
13: Drug use or misuse must be discussed with integrity
(return to index)
A significant proportion of new infection in many countries is
caused by injecting drugs, so it is essential that we tackle this
important area. Many are likely to have been offered drugs or to
have experimented by the time they are seventeen or eighteen. The
first thing we have to recognise is that there is something of a
double standard in many countries. Many who are against `drugs'
are in fact addicted themselves. We have already seen how dangerous
nicotine addiction is, but the most commonly abused drug in many
countries is alcohol.
We need to acknowledge these things before we can talk sensibly
with young people about the use of cannabis, ecstasy or crack, or
the injection of drugs. Cannabis is far less physically addictive
than tobacco, and perhaps less dangerous to general health.
However, there is certainly a lot of evidence that those using
cannabis regularly may be less careful when it comes to thinking
about sex. As a relaxant, it removes sexual inhibitions---but then
so does alcohol, and alcohol is a very important element in unsafe
sex. Using cannabis may introduce the user to a circle of friends
or a way of life where it becomes part of the norm to try other
things. These are usually given freely at first. The charging comes
later.
In the middle of the process are some who will need to sell drugs
to cover the costs of their own habit. The injector may well be
injecting all kinds of things---not just heroin, or what has been
sold as heroin. We need to get across the message that sharing needles
or syringes is the quickest way to get HIV.
An important part of the approach is to help pupils see how they
can avoid situations where they know they will be under pressure
to accept drugs. We also need to help them see how they can say
no in such a situation, while preserving their self-esteem.
Lesson
14: Condoms need to be discussed in context
(return to index)
The most obvious question facing any educator in schools is how
to discuss the condom issue. Christians may have all kinds of objections
to the way in which condoms seem to have been promoted as the answer
to AIDS. These need to be laid aside when we think about going into
schools. We need to take an objective look at the facts, and once
again listen to teachers before deciding our approach.
Excellent protection, but not 100% safe. We have looked at the
failure rates of condoms for pregnancy and HIV in Chapter
6. A survey of eighteen-year-olds in Glasgow asked for a description
of `safer sex', and 84% mentioned condoms, 68% some aspect of partner
selection, but only 2% mentioned abstaining from certain sexual
activities as an option. A very one-dimensional message is being
given, yet abstinence must increasingly be recognised as a valid---and
100% safe---option, and is increasingly becoming a central part
of thinking on prevention.
Testing is a real alternative
It is hard to think of a more absurd approach than just promoting
condoms, particularly in view of the pregnancy failure rates we
saw in Chapter Six. If you
think through what the campaigns are saying, the conclusion is that
all sexually-active adults should use condoms in all relationships
for life if either has ever had sex before.
This is a ridiculous message. What happens with couples who have
been faithful to each other for years? Are we really expecting them
to go on using condoms in addition to the pill for the rest of their
fertile lives? What happens when the woman wants to have a baby?
Are we seriously expecting women who have gone through the menopause
to continue using condoms with their lifelong partners till they
die of old age?
As we have seen, the answer is that HIV testing is an excellent
alternative to condom use. It costs less to have a test than it
does to buy three months' supply of condoms. If both partners are
uninfected, they can enjoy anxiety-free, rubber-free sex for the
rest of their lives. They will, however, need to be able to trust
each other not to have other relationships or to share needles if
injecting drugs.
The testing option has hardly been mentioned by many governments,
and has been missing from poster and TV campaigns because it is
not politically correct. Various highly-influential pressure groups
have persuaded governments that testing is still too sensitive and
controversial, mainly because of discrimination.
No need to roll condoms on bananas
People often ask whether we give out condoms in the classroom.
Of course the answer may vary from country to country, but my own
view is that it is almost always unnecessary and inappropriate.
Most parents of teenagers would be horrified if we were to roll
condoms onto bananas in front of teenagers. We are in the business
of giving an all-round message on AIDS, explaining the value and
limitations of the condom.
If schools wish to demonstrate the use of condoms, we would expect
that to be a part of their overall policy on sex education, after
having carefully consulted with parents and governors. In my experience,
few schools feel a demonstration is necessary, desirable or appropriate.
Teaching people to sin safely?
While some outside of schools want all educators to demonstrate
condom use and to teach teenagers that it is good to have fun with
sex when you are young, others are horrified, saying that even to
mention condoms in class is to invite people to `sin safely'. Surely,
they say, there is a danger that in even talking about sex and condoms
we may be encouraging promiscuity?
In the context of a school class we are called to give the facts.
Christian agencies working in the AIDS field are certainly not wanting
to encourage sex outside of marriage , but it would be absurd to
avoid any mention of condoms at all. Even if you say condoms should
only be used by people who are married, there may be many situations
in the future where a couple have got married knowing that one partner
is infected from the past. Are their lives also to be placed at
risk through a ban on all information about condoms? Young people
live in the real world---so do you and I---and we need to demonstrate
that in a realistic down-to-earth approach. (See later for Catholic
approach and other church issues in relation to condom discussions.)
Condom summary
In summary, then, we need to make pupils aware that there are several
ways to reduce the risk of HIV or avoid it altogether. As the World
Health Organisation says, the most effective way to prevent sexual
transmission of HIV is to abstain, or for two people who are uninfected
to remain faithful to each other. Alternatively, the correct use
of condoms will reduce the risk significantly. We need to get across
that having sex without using a condom could be suicidal with a
partner who may be infected. However, condoms may let you down.
Lesson
15: Ethnic minorities often welcome a Christian approach
(return to index)
Over the years, ACET has gained a lot of experience teaching in
different kinds of schools in different cultural areas. The same
approach to AIDS has found great favour across the spectrum, including
schools which are 95% Asian with Muslim, Hindu and Sikh children
and parents.
Parents appreciate educators who have a moral framework for their
own lives which is similar to their own. Many from other religious
groupings or different ethnic backgrounds are deeply devout or traditional,
and find Western sexual standards shocking, upsetting and worrying,
as they consider the future of their children.
Lesson
16: Catholic schools also welcome sensitive AIDS education
(return to index)
The sensitivities in Catholic schools tend to be greater, although
this varies very much from school to school and from country to
country. The big issue for Catholics is whether condoms will be
mentioned.
Some Catholic schools take the view that it is permissible to talk
about how HIV spreads, how it causes illness, and how to help with
HIV, but not mention condoms unless pupils ask directly. Others
are more relaxed, so long as the lesson is placed firmly in the
context of the Christian ideal of sex as part of marriage for life.
The range of what is permitted varies from area to area and country
to country.
As in every other school context, the best approach is to treat
each school and each class as unique, discussing with teachers the
approach they want, and any particular sensitivities of the school
or of the particular class. This is the only reliable way to avoid
misunderstandings, to ensure we serve schools well and to make certain
we are operating as part of their team.
In Northern Ireland, the same educator, programme and materials
have found warm acceptance in both Catholic and Protestant schools.
The problems are therefore often more imagined than real. The key
is a strong relationship of trust and respect built with individual
educators.
Lesson
17: Lesson content needs to vary with age
(return to index)
Some schools will want to educate pupils who have not yet reached
their teenage years. This is perfectly possible without offence
or difficulty, but the content will need to be adapted under the
guidance of teachers. It is not necessary, for example, to explain
about sex in order to teach about babies born with HIV. Some
aspects of AIDS can be taught in the context of geography, science,
hygiene and other school topics.
Countries vary greatly. In Uganda, for example, elements of sex
education and AIDS are often taught to children as young as six.
The reason is that in towns or villages where up to a third of the
population is HIV-infected, most children will have seen members
of their own families die from AIDS. The illness dominates local
life, and an explanation has been found to be necessary. In comparison,
such topics are very difficult to discuss with young children in
a country like Thailand.
Lesson
18: AIDS education needed before some leave school
(return to index)
With many pupils leaving school at the age of sixteen in countries
like the UK, AIDS education must start earlier. A recent survey
in Scotland showed that those leaving school early are often much
less likely to take notice of public health messages later, and
this group may take greater risks than those who carry on with general
education. School education is therefore particularly important
for this group.
Lesson
19: Establishing traditional behaviour patterns as most common can
be very effective
(return to index)
Behaviour is often influenced by peer pressure, or by what people
think everybody else is doing. Media and peer group conversation
tends to exaggerate reality, however. For example, it may give the
impression: `Almost all my friends sleep around,' or, `Most of my
friends use drugs,' or, `Hardly anyone these days is still a virgin
by their eighteenth birthday.' A lot of talk, but little or no performance.
Can these impressions be changed? A US study compared two approaches
to prevention of smoking, alcohol abuse and use of marijuana by
schoolchildren. The first method taught skills to pupils to help
them refuse unwanted offers. The second corrected falsely-high impressions
of how many other pupils were experimenting, and of what most others
in the school thought of these behaviours.
The second `normative' approach worked well in altering reported
behaviour one year after the programme. The first had fewer measurable
effects. It is essential also to reinforce the positive behaviour
of the large number of teenagers who do not abuse alcohol or other
drugs, or take sexual risks. They are without doubt the majority
in most parts of the world.
This is really important. Those who say no to drugs or sexual
activity as teenagers need to understand that they are in good company.
Despite all the noise, most others in the classroom have made exactly
the same decisions and share the same values. Far too often
teenagers have drifted into risky behaviour after becoming convinced
that abstinence is eccentric and that they needed to take risks
just to be seen to be normal. This is particularly tragic,
since the pressures on them are based on cruel deception, totally
false impressions which will ultimately kill some of them.
Normalisation of abstinent behaviour could be the most powerful
weapon we have: using peer group pressure.
Take the use of drugs. Even in a country where most teenagers
have tried something by the time they leave school the situation
is far less bad than it appears. The majority of those trying
drugs will have done so only once or twice, and other regular users
give up after a brief phase. Why? Because they didn't
like it or because it is "un-cool". Surveys show
that "life-time" use of drugs is far higher than figures
for how many teenagers have used drugs in the last six months.
It's time to talk about the truth. Saying no is normal.
It's what most young people do!
Lesson
20: Social skills/peer resistance training works
(return to index)
Many studies have shown that classes designed to help pupils develop
the ability to say no are effective in behaviour change. Facts are
essential to understand the problem, and personal presentation is
vital to make the problem real, but pupils may still take risks
against their wishes if they feel insecure about themselves with
a poor self-image, and are afraid of being looked down on or laughed
at.
Surveys show that problems and issues faced are remarkably similar
from country to country. This is also true in the experience of
international agencies like ACET. While cultural sensitivities vary
and may require adjustment of content and approach, many basic issues
such as motivation, communication and long-term behaviour change
remain the same. People are people after all.
The impact of schools programmes is likely to be greatest when
mass media campaigns are also part of the overall national picture,
as studies on teenage smoking have shown.
Dealing
with criticism
(return to index)
In such a sensitive area, whatever one does will be criticised.
The test of whether you have the balance about right in schools
is probably when you are criticised from several different sides
equally, but none too severely.
Constructive criticism must always be taken seriously, especially
if it relates to conduct or lesson content. That is why evaluation
forms are essential. You want to pick up a slight problem with an
educator's approach long before there is a complaint.
We need to understand the background to the criticism. For example,
there are hundreds of self-appointed experts in the UK when it comes
to AIDS prevention. Hardly any of them have any real experience
of teaching about AIDS in schools, or if they do it may be in just
one or two schools which are unrepresentative of the country as
a whole.
Coping
with the `thought police'
(return to index)
Sometimes comments made from `non-school' sources can be vitriolic.
Valid points may be being made, but I often wonder why they have
been allowed into so few schools themselves if they are such experts
on getting the message right. Why have their own resources and leaflets
found so little favour?
The classroom is a uniquely difficult and sensitive environment
and my feeling has always been that it is up to teachers and pupils
to tell us what they need.
We must allow teachers to get on with the job. They are the experts,
we are the assistants. Failure to recognise this by has been
the reason why so little government-sourced material has been used
in schools in some countries such as the UK. It is nothing short
of a scandal that a modest schools programme like ACET's, intended
as no more than a pilot to show what could be done nationally, should
turn out to be the largest programme of its kind in the England.
Perhaps there is little new under the sun when it comes to HIV
prevention---or criticisms of it. Negative reactions to schools
programmes run by Christian organisations have tended to be very
repetitive along ten main themes.
Objection
1: `Large classes are a waste of time'
(return to index)
It is obvious that the more time spent with a group of pupils,
and the higher the presenter-to-pupil ratio, the greater the impact
is likely to be, but we have already seen that larger classes may
be the only ones on offer in a school. A school which opts for a
single large presentation one year as an experiment, will often
open up more of the timetable the following year. Most schools need
time to find their way forward.
Objection
2: `Faithfulness to one partner is a naive suggestion'
(return to index)
Some think it is hopelessly naive even to mention the option of
being faithful to one person, let alone staying with one partner
for life. It is interesting that in almost every class I have been
into pupils have worked out the options of abstention and monogamy
for themselves---and the benefits.
When you ask them what `safe sex' is, there are usually two reactions.
If you ask who has seen the slogan `condoms mean safe sex' or `for
safe sex use a condom', you will often find every hand shoots into
the air. Almost always they have misread official slogans by dropping
the `r' off the end of `safer' to remember `safe'. However, when
you ask pupils what they think, those with an ounce of common sense
tell you that safe sex is certainly not using a condom. They know
friends or relatives who became pregnant using them.
I would argue that it is hopelessly naive to expect that pupils
are going to decide after your lesson to use condoms every time
they have sex until the day they die, when the alternative of a
test in a long-term relationship is so simple. Also, many people
are searching for love that lasts.
Objection
3: `Suggesting celibacy or monogamy as options is moralistic'
(return to index)
Some say that you should not make any suggestions at all about
behaviour, nor propose any role models. `Pupils should be totally
free from any proactive or directive approach.' They say it is moralistic
to talk about keeping to one partner or to suggest not having a
sexual partner at all.
In reply, three points need to be made. First, medical facts are
morally neutral. It is a medical and human fact that it is possible
for people to refrain from sexual activity or promiscuity, and that
this can be a very healthy way to live---for a start it protects
you from sex diseases. Secondly, in countries like the UK there
are legal requirements to present sex education `in such a manner
as to encourage those pupils to have regard to moral considerations
and the value of family life'. Thirdly, even if such an approach
was not required by law, the parents and governors of most schools
in the country would insist on it anyway.
Having addressed a number of Parent/Teacher associations, it is
obvious that some of the most conservative parents are those who
were themselves teenagers in the 1960s and are now deeply concerned
about their children living the way they did in a pre-AIDS world.
Many still want marriage to work for themselves and most of all
for their children.
Objection
4: `If you don't show people how to use condoms they won't bother
or they will make mistakes'
(return to index)
It is true that people should be encouraged to familiarise themselves
with a condom before they need to use one. The best place for this
to happen is in the privacy of the person's own home, where the
packet can be opened, the condom examined, the instructions read
and if necessary experimented with. Demonstrating condoms to children
under sixteen years of age could be taken to be encouraging under-age
sex in many countries, and even over that age you could land yourself
in trouble.
Objection
5: `Visiting speakers are dangerous because they do not fit into
the overall work of the school'
(return to index)
We have already discussed the importance of each educator becoming,
in effect, an extension of the head teacher's own staff in the school.
Nothing is worse than a hit-and-run approach with no continuity,
no follow up and little impact.
We have also noticed the huge advantages many schools see in outside
carer/educators. They have impact because they are involved in care.
They are respected experts. They are seen as non-threatening and
not part of the establishment. They are often easier for pupils
to talk to. They bring a fresh perspective to the school.
Objection
6: `Not enough time is given to gay issues'
(return to index)
As we have seen, AIDS prevention is about preventing HIV transmission
through risky sexual practices and drug injecting, not about sexual
orientation. This important area is a part of overall sex education,
as well as personal lifeskills and social education. In any
case, as the epidemic unfolds, gay issues are increasingly irrelevant
in the global AIDS picture.
Objection
7: `You fail to point out that you are almost 100% safe in low incidence
countries unless you inject drugs or have anal sex with a gay man'
(return to index)
Objections 6 and 7 are almost opposites of each other. If we spend
time on the relationship between a gay lifestyle and AIDS, we also
create the impression that AIDS is just a gay problem, when as we
have seen, AIDS is an increasing threat to heterosexuals in industrialised
countries and a huge risk in developing countries. If we spend no
time on gay lifestyles we create the false impression that all in
our society are equally at risk.
It is `politically correct' to say there is no such thing as an
`at risk group', but only `at risk behaviour'. While it is important
that we teach people not to hide behind labels and prejudice, we
may be in danger of splitting hairs. It is certainly true that the
risk of a gay man picking up HIV from a sexual encounter in a gay
bar in London is hundreds of times greater than the risk of a heterosexual
man picking up HIV from a girl he meets at a party in the North
of England. However, in the classroom we have a very short time
to put across a simple message that AIDS is real, HIV is spreading
and these are the ways to protect yourself and those you love. Although
the risks are low, it is a fact that some have become HIV-infected
after a single episode of unprotected sex (see
Chapter 6).
People object if you talk about the illness as it really is. We
know what we are talking about. AIDS is a very unpleasant illness,
with many unpleasant symptoms which are difficult to treat. People
do not just live with AIDS, they die too.
I often say to classes in schools that I hope we do not ever have
to look after any of them. After all, that is why I am there: to
try to save their lives if I can. If they carry on behaving like
some of those who left the school over the last few years, then
it is likely that doctors or nurses will be caring for some of them
too. This is a frightening thought and it greatly disturbs me too.
A few years ago people were reluctant to talk about dying with
AIDS because it created a negative image. This is ridiculous. If
you create the impression that to have AIDS is to be a hero, that
living with AIDS can be fun, that you can live for many years and
there is a lot of hope for a cure, then don't be surprised when
people decide there is nothing to worry about.
Objection
9: `You are creating a negative view of sex'
(return to index)
Some say that if we talk a lot about the dangers of unrestrained
sexual activity, then a new Victorian age of sexually-repressed
people will emerge. I have met some HIV educators who have openly
told me that one of their purposes is to help teenage boys and girls
feel happy about their bodies and about their sexuality, so they
feel free to enjoy themselves.
Half the emphasis of their presentations is therefore on sexual
enjoyment---for example, teaching young girls about orgasm---and
the other half is on how to have fun more safely. They say this
is realistic and fits in with what the pupils are doing anyway.
As you can imagine, they very rarely get the chance to give such
presentations in UK schools. This approach certainly fits well with
our culture. You only have to wander into a video shop to see what
I mean.
Western culture has produced conditions for the rapid spread of
HIV and AIDS by encouraging a casual view of sex, through mass communications
with a global influence. Our culture is out of date and needs to
change in a post-AIDS world. There is no such thing as free sex
without cost. At the same time, Western influence has had a huge
effect on liberalising sexual constraint in many traditional tribal
cultures. In many people groups, where premarital sex or adultery
was prohibited and rare, promiscuity is now common.
As we have seen, surveys show that the younger someone is when
they first have sex, the more likely they are to have multiple partners.
There is also a strong relationship between the age at which a girl
first has sex and her risk of cervical cancer. This cancer is often
caused by a virus which is sexually transmitted. It appears that
the immature cervix of a young teenager is particularly vulnerable
to infection. Deaths from cervical cancer are increasing, despite
intensive screening programmes.
Other sexually-transmitted diseases are emerging for which treatment
is difficult or impossible. For example, genital herpes, which produces
clusters of highly-infectious and painful blisters from time to
time throughout life, and genital warts, which require repeated
treatments with caustic substances. In the last twelve months alone,
250 million people worldwide became infected with a sexually-transmitted
disease. The highest incidence is in twenty- to twenty-four-year-olds
followed by fifteen- to nineteen-year-olds.
In these circumstances, I feel as a doctor that we do our young
people a gross disfavour by making out sex is always wonderful.
This is totally ignoring the pain and devastation felt by many pupils
in almost every class as a result of marriage break up, or the collapse
of stable relationships outside of marriage . On many occasions,
unfaithfulness is at the root of the problem. It is always the children
who suffer, caught up in conflicts with split loyalties, and with
possibly two `mums' or `dads'.
A national UK survey showed that children of divorced parents often
continue to suffer well into adult life, when they are more likely
to be unemployed and experience psychological difficulties. There
are real costs attached to so-called sexual freedom and these need
to be clearly taught and understood.
It is also vitally important to give a very positive message about
sex as a wonderful experience; something which gives great pleasure
and can be very fulfilling, especially when it is an expression
of love, respect, appreciation, care and commitment. Sex is something
well worth waiting for. The UK Population Trends survey shows that
couples living together before they get married are more likely
to be divorced fifteen years after marriage than those who do not.
At this point we start hearing objection number 3 again, with suggestions
that the previous sentence contains highly moralistic, right wing,
Christian propaganda. No wonder schools are voting with their feet.
Objection
10: `You should teach people other ways to have sex'
(return to index)
The AIDS industry continues to churn out large numbers of guides
to safer sex which give long lists of `low risk' or `no risk' activities.
Examples of `safe sex' given include rubbing each other's thighs,
mutual masturbation and `talking dirty' on the phone to each other
while masturbating.
Some seriously suggest we should be discussing some of these options
in schools. They have obviously never tried such an approach with
pupils. Laughter is the only response you are likely to get from
a class if you seriously suggest that rubbing each other's thighs
is the same thing as having sex. That certainly is naive. The suggestion
may be valid for gay men who know there is a one-in-three chance
that their next partner could be infected, but it does not go down
too well with teenagers in low-incidence countries.
Why should they bother with such a feeble substitute for the real
thing when they know they can enjoy rubber-free, anxiety-free, penetrative
sex for life, with the help of an HIV test if they or their partner
has been at risk in the past? As we have seen earlier, deciding
whether to have a test is a delicate business and all those wanting
a test should be carefully counselled first.
Over-promotion
can be a problem
(return to index)
Having looked at ten of the commonest criticisms ACET has faced,
we need to look at the opposite problem: over-promotion of a church
programme by well-meaning Christians who want to help. A lot of
damage can be done. For example, if someone known to be a moral
campaigner goes to the head teacher and begins a campaign to get
you in, it would be better if that person had never started.
Setting
up a schools programme
(return to index)
As we have seen above, you need to take very great care indeed
before rushing in as an AIDS educator. The reason is that an amateurish
and clumsy approach to this sensitive area could jeopardise the
work of many other agencies.
If you are already established as a youth or schools worker supported
by churches in the area, then you may be able with care to include
some aspects of AIDS in what you are doing. However, you will need
to make absolutely sure you get your facts and general approach
right. The ACET/ABI teacher pack may help in this, together with
ACET's training courses. You will have greatest impact, as we have
seen, if you have been involved in caring for those with AIDS.

Why
prevention is often swamped by care Economics
of prevention Prevention
saves huge care costs Health
education is free The cost
of AIDS Swapping
third world debts for programmes When
deaths damage the economy Ten
years before health savings Advertising
has encouraged risks Behaviour
can change Young
people take greatest risks Sex
education needs to start at a younger age The
AIDS generation is growing up AIDS
in the church youth group Teenagers
in church get pregnant Starting
sex education earlier in churches Sex
in the playground `Sex
is dirty so save it for someone you love' Role
models do matter Schools
programmes
Lesson
1: HIV/AIDS education in schools is sensitive Lesson
2: Facts alone are of limited value Lesson
3: Family deaths change behaviour Lesson
4: We need to make AIDS real to pupils Lesson
5: Professional educators working within a moral framework
Lesson 6: Success breeds
success Lesson
7: Compulsory HIV/AIDS education opens new doors Lesson
8: Help pupils find their own answers Lesson
9: No need to preach Lesson
10: Classes can be large or small Lesson
11: Teachers need to be closely involved Lesson
12: Sexual orientation is a separate issue Lesson
13: Drug use or misuse must be discussed with integrity
Lesson
14: Condoms need to be discussed in context Lesson
15: Ethnic minorities often welcome a Christian approach
Lesson
16: Catholic schools also welcome sensitive AIDS education
Lesson
17: Lesson content needs to vary with age Lesson
18: AIDS education needed before some leave school Lesson
19: Establishing traditional behaviour patterns as most common can
be very effective Lesson
20: Social skills/peer resistance training works Dealing with
criticism Coping
with the `thought police' Objection
1: `Large classes are a waste of time' Objection
2: `Faithfulness to one partner is a naive suggestion'
Objection
3: `Suggesting celibacy or monogamy as options is moralistic'
Objection
4: `If you don't show people how to use condoms they won't bother
or they will make mistakes' Objection
5: `Visiting speakers are dangerous because they do not fit into
the overall work of the school' Objection
6: `Not enough time is given to gay issues' Objection
7: `You fail to point out that you are almost 100% safe unless you
inject drugs or have anal sex with a gay man' Objection
9: `You are creating a negative view of sex' Objection
10: `You should teach people other ways to have sex' Over-promotion
can be a problem Setting
up a schools programme
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